Toyota Stadium (Texas)

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Toyota Stadium
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Exterior of the stadium in 2019
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Location in Texas##Location in the United States
Former names Frisco Soccer & Entertainment Complex (2004–2005)
Pizza Hut Park (2005–2012)
FC Dallas Stadium (2012–2013)
Address 9200 World Cup Way, Ste 202
Location Frisco, Texas
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Owner Frisco, Texas
Operator Frisco Soccer, LP
Capacity Soccer: 19,096
American Football: 20,500
[1]
Field size 117 by 74 yards (107 m × 68 m)
Surface Tifway 419 Bermuda Grass[2]
Construction
Broke ground 2004
Opened August 6, 2005
Renovated 2018
Construction cost $80 million
($96.9 million in 2021 dollars[3]); 2018 renovation: $55 million
Architect HKS, Inc.
General contractor Lee Lewis Construction, Inc.[4]
Tenants
FC Dallas (MLS) (2005–present)
Frisco ISD football (2005–present)
Frisco Bowl (NCAA) (2017–present)
NCAA Division I Football Championship (2010-present)
National Soccer Hall of Fame (2018–present)
North Texas SC (USL1) (2019)

Toyota Stadium is a soccer-specific stadium located in Frisco, a suburb of Dallas, Texas, United States. Built and owned by the city of Frisco, the 20,500-seat stadium opened in 2005. Its primary tenants are Major League Soccer club FC Dallas and Frisco Independent School District high-school football games. It also hosts the annual NCAA Division I Football Championship, the title game of college football's Football Championship Subdivision. Additionally, it is the home of the National Soccer Hall of Fame, which opened in 2018.[5]

History

Toyota Stadium was the third MLS soccer-specific stadium to be built after Historic Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio (1999) and Dignity Health Sports Park near Los Angeles (2003). It cost approximately $80 million and opened on August 6, 2005, with a match between FC Dallas and the MetroStars, which ended in a 2–2 draw. The stadium seats 20,500 in a U-shaped design with the north end including a permanent covered stage for hosting concerts, similar to SeatGeek Stadium near Chicago, which opened one year after Toyota Stadium. Although it was then hoped the permanent stage would help the stadium increase revenue by hosting mid-sized concerts, the design proved unpopular and other MLS clubs rejected building permanent stages in their new stadiums, leaving the stadium's design looking dated. There is widespread support among club fans for the stage to be removed and replaced with a full stand in a future renovation. The stadium includes 18 luxury suites as well as a private 6,000-square-foot (560 m2) stadium club.

The stadium played host to the 2005 MLS Cup final, seeing the LA Galaxy defeat the New England Revolution 1–0 in overtime for their second MLS Cup. It was also selected to host the 2006 MLS Cup, which ended 1–1 after overtime with the Houston Dynamo defeating the New England Revolution 4–3 on penalty kicks. In 2016, FC Dallas hosted and won the U.S. Open Cup Final, also against the Revolution.

In 2018 construction was completed on an extensive renovation of the south end of the stadium. The renovation included a European-style roof built over the new multi-tiered stand that replaced the old bleacher section, the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Club located on the second tier, the third tier season ticket member seating area, new locker rooms, patio, store, entrance, box office and press conference area. Although many club supporters wanted roof structures to be built over the west and east stands to provide shade during the brutal Texas summers, those projects were postponed until a future phase of renovation. Also included in the $55 million project was the new National Soccer Hall of Fame.[6]

Complex

The complex also has an additional 17 regulation size, stadium-quality soccer fields (both grass and artificial turf) outside the main stadium. These fields are used for practice by FC Dallas, matches for the FC Dallas reserve squad, and for hosting soccer tournaments. Youth tournaments that have made use of the complex include Dallas Cup, Olympic Development Program National Championships, Generation adidas Cup,[7] and the USYSA National Championships.

Stadium name

From 2005 until January 2012, the naming rights to the facility were held by national pizza chain Pizza Hut, which is headquartered in nearby Plano, and the stadium was known as Pizza Hut Park. Nicknames for Pizza Hut Park included PHP, the Hut, and The Oven, the latter referring to Texas' summer climate during afternoon games (and also because the field is well below ground level). On January 7, 2012, the contract linking the pizza franchise with the stadium expired, and the stadium was renamed FC Dallas Stadium.[8]

On September 10, 2013, FC Dallas reached an agreement with Gulf States Toyota Distributors, headquartered in Houston, to rename its home field Toyota Stadium. The 17 practice fields around the stadium would be known as Toyota Soccer Center.[9][10]

National Soccer Hall of Fame

In 2015, plans were announced that the stadium would be the new home of the National Soccer Hall of Fame (NSHOF). In addition to the NSHOF museum, the stadium's south end received extensive renovations and the entire project cost $55 million and was completed in 2018. The Hall of Fame has two components – the NSHOF Experience and the NSHOF Club. The Experience houses the museum and serves as the location for the Hall of Fame annual induction ceremony. The Club includes specialty seating for season ticket holders for all FC Dallas home matches, as well as multiple event spaces that function as food and beverage hubs on game days. The NSHOF includes soccer memorabilia, modern technology, and virtual reality exhibits.[11]

Notable events

College football

File:Toyotastadiumfcs.jpg
2015 FCS National Championship football game between North Dakota State and Jacksonville State at Toyota Stadium.

Soccer

Concerts

In August 2008, the stadium hosted the heavy metal/hard rock festival tour Ozzfest.[citation needed] It has regularly hosted concerts by Jimmy Buffett. It was also the site for several editions of Edgefest organized by former Dallas alternative rock station KDGE.[citation needed]

Notable concerts

Date Artist(s) Opening act(s) Tour Tickets sold Revenue Additional notes
April 15, 2007 My Chemical Romance Muse The Black Parade World Tour This concert was part of Edgefest.
April 28, 2007 Jimmy Buffett Bama Breeze Tour [21]
April 26, 2008 The Year of Still Here Tour [22]
April 27, 2008 My Chemical Romance Billy Talent
Drive By
The Black Parade World Tour This concert was part of Edgefest.
August 9, 2008 Metallica 2008 European Vacation Tour This concert was part of Ozzfest.
April 18, 2009 Jimmy Buffett Summerzcool Tour [23]
May 17, 2009 Kenny Chesney Lady Antebellum
Miranda Lambert
Sun City Carnival Tour 25,026 / 25,026 $1,840,494 The concert was originally scheduled on May 2, 2009, but was rescheduled on May 17, 2009, due to heavy rain and lightning.
May 22, 2010 Jimmy Buffett Under the Big Top Tour
September 18, 2010 Kiss Pat Green
Drowning Pool
The Hottest Show on Earth Tour
May 21, 2011 Jimmy Buffett Ilo Ferreira Welcome to Fin Land Tour [24]
April 22, 2012 Garbage Not Your Kind of People World Tour These concerts were part of Edgefest.
The Black Keys Arctic Monkeys El Camino Tour
Evanescence Evanescence Tour
May 4, 2013 Jimmy Buffett Jackson Browne Songs from St. Somewhere Tour [25]
June 21, 2014 Jackson Browne
John Fogerty
Monte Montgomery
This One's For You Tour [26]
May 30, 2015 Huey Lewis & The News Workin' n' Playin' Tour [27]
September 5, 2015 Ed Sheeran Christina Perri
Jamie Lawson
x Tour
May 28, 2016 Jimmy Buffett Jerry Jeff Walker I Don't Know Tour [28]
June 10, 2017 Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top was the special guest.[29]
October 20, 2018 Imagine Dragons Evolve World Tour
May 4, 2019 Off the Rails Country Music Fest
May 5, 2019
September 21, 2019 OneRepublic
The Fray
Maelyn Jarmon National Hall of Fame Induction Weekend Concert 2019
October 2, 2021 Willie Nelson National Hall of Fame Induction Weekend Concert 2021

Dr. Pink Field

North of the main stadium is Dr. Pink Field, a mini-stadium named after former Frisco doctor Dr. Erwin G. Pink.[30] The field is used for Frisco ISD high school football and soccer.

Dr. Pink Field formerly hosted games for the Frisco Griffins Rugby Club.[31] The Griffins drew an attendance of a few hundred people per game.[32]

See also

References

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External links

Events and tenants
Preceded by Home of
FC Dallas

2005–present
Succeeded by
current
Preceded by Host of the MLS Cup
2005, 2006
Succeeded by
RFK Stadium
Preceded by Host of the NCAA Division I Football Championship
2010–present
Succeeded by
current
Preceded by Host of the College Cup
2008
Succeeded by
WakeMed Soccer Park

Template:2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup stadiums